This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Read How It Feels to Be Colored Me, by Zora Neale
Hurston
What is most likely the author's reason for referring to her young self as "Zora of Orange County" and "Zora of Eatonville'? Answer choices for the above question A. To show that Zora was close-minded as a child. B. It is meant ironically, as Zora was actually born in Jacksonville. C. To delineate the years of her life before she left Eatonville, when she had a simpler understanding of racial matters D. It is meant affectionately, as they were her nicknames as a child.
Answer: C. To delineate the years of her life before she left Eatonville, when she had a simpler understanding of racial matters
Explanation:
Neale recalls how she used to live in Eatonville, Florida, an exclusively "colored town," where white people where only tourists or people passing by the town, so she didn´t kite understand the racial social issues. It´s only when she´s sent to school in Jacksonville, with mostly white people, that she realized the meaning of the color of her skin, and therefore, she didn´t feel like "Zora of Orange County" nor "Zora of Eatonville," but a "little colored girl."
Answer:
Admit that they lost the bet
Explanation:
The options you were given are the following:
- admit that they lost the bet
- bet more money on Smiley's dog
- grab Smiley's dog and tie it up
- try to help the other dog beat Smiley's dog
An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative, non-literal meaning. We can't conclude what this type of phrase means based on the meanings of individual words that make it up. Here, we have the idiom <em>throw up the sponge</em>. No one is literally throwing up sponges. This phrase means<em> </em><em>to give up a contest </em>or <em>to acknowledge defeat</em>.
Based on this information, we can conclude that the dogs are fighting until the people who own them admit that they lost the bet.
Hello imspiderman04,
Thank you for posting your question on brainly.
I believe tha answer is c.third person
hope i helped,
Cheerio!
False. Her new husband, Nathan is not ashamed of the fact that his wife can read and write. She even teaches her daughter, Ira.